Class A — A-type (White)

A-type stars are white or blue-white stars with surface temperatures of 7,500 to 10,000 K. They comprise about 0.6% of main-sequence stars and are known for having the strongest hydrogen absorption lines in their spectra. Many of the best-known stars are A-type, including Sirius (A1V), the brightest star in the night sky, and Vega (A0V), which was historically the reference star for the magnitude system. A-type stars live for roughly 1-2 billion years.

A-type stars are white to blue-white stars with surface temperatures between 7,500 and 10,000 K. They represent about 0.6% of main-sequence stars and include many of the most culturally important stars in the sky. A-type stars are particularly significant in astronomical history: Vega, the prototypical A0V star, served as the original definition of apparent magnitude 0.0 and was the first star (other than the Sun) to be photographed (1850) and to have its spectrum recorded (1872).

Characteristics

A-type spectra are dominated by the hydrogen Balmer series, which reaches maximum strength at A0. These stars are massive enough (1.4-2.1 solar masses) to have radiative envelopes rather than convective ones, which allows chemical peculiarities to develop. The Am (metallic-line) and Ap (peculiar) stars show unusual abundances of certain elements concentrated by diffusion in their stable atmospheres. A-type main-sequence stars live for roughly 1-3 billion years. The debris disks detected around many A stars (notably Vega and Fomalhaut) hint at planetary systems in formation.

Notable Examples

Sirius (Alpha Canis Majoris, A1V) is the brightest star in the night sky at magnitude -1.46, largely due to its proximity at 8.6 light-years. Its white dwarf companion Sirius B was the first white dwarf discovered. Vega (Alpha Lyrae, A0V) and Altair (Alpha Aquilae, A7V) join Deneb to form the Summer Triangle. Fomalhaut (Alpha Piscis Austrini, A3V) hosts a dramatic debris ring and was the first star with a directly imaged exoplanet candidate. Castor (Alpha Geminorum) is a spectacular sextuple star system dominated by A-type components.

HIP 18254HIP 18275HIP 18286HIP 18290HIP 18308HIP 18339HIP 18345HIP 18349HIP 18365HIP 18378HIP 18384HIP 14957HIP 15614HIP 46395HIP 18435HIP 18438HIP 18472HIP 18516HIP 18575HIP 18594HIP 18650HIP 18656HIP 18689HIP 46396HIP 18733HIP 18780HIP 18807HIP 18851HIP 18858HIP 1889HIP 18953HIP 18971HIP 18977HIP 18989HIP 19005HIP 19068HIP 19123HIP 46402HIP 46416HIP 2868HIP 28680HIP 28681HIP 28686HIP 28692HIP 28694HIP 16054HIP 16292HIP 16856

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a class A star?
Class A (A-type (White)) stars are white stars. A-type stars are white or blue-white stars with surface temperatures of 7,500 to 10,000 K. They comprise about 0.6% of main-sequence stars and are known for having the strongest hydrogen absorption li
How hot are class A stars?
Class A stars have surface temperatures between 7,500 K and 10,000 K.
What color are class A stars?
Class A stars appear white.
How many class A stars are in the StarFYI database?
StarFYI currently catalogs 18,693 class A stars.
How luminous are class A stars?
Luminous, 5-25 solar luminosities